Thursday, November 20, 2008

T-me! DYO t-shirt kits ... especially for kids.


If you like Poloppo's wearable art by children, you'll love our new wearable art - made by your own kids!

You asked us, and we listened. We've had so many parents ask, "How can we get our own children's artwork onto a great t-shirt?" We decided to make it easy for you.

T-me Design-Your-Own is a do-it-yourself kit that includes everything your child needs to design his or her own wearable artwork. She can draw a picture using the markers and papers in the kit, choose her favorite t-shirt style from the enclosed catalog, and mail the drawing to us in the pre-paid return envelope. In 10 days, she'll receive her very own wearable art.

Kids can get creative straight away, or they can send in something they've already drawn. Kids can get their artwork printed on American Apparel t-shirts for themselves, friends, siblings, and even Mom and Dad. Look for more styles in '09.

The kit's unique t-shirt-shaped packaging converts into an easel-style picture frame so kids can easily display their favorite artwork.

T-me is a great holiday gift for children of any age. It even comes with a gift tag that says, "With many best wishes from ...", so you can personalize it before it gets to your favorite young artist.

T-me is now on sale at select kids' boutiques or online here.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Decision 2008, Kid-style


Upload your election drawings to the Poloppo gallery and you could receive a t-shirt with your artwork on it!

Kids, even though you need to wait till you're 18 to vote, Poloppo wants to help show the world what's on your mind as the election nears.

Which candidate do you support? Which local ballot measures are important to you and your family? Have you heard the candidates say something that you like or don't like?

The decisions your parents and other adults make on Nov. 4 will affect things that are important to you: the way things work in your school, the way we care for our planet and our health. Decisions we make now can even affect whether we're at war or at peace when you become an adult.

Whether you have a strong opinion or you're still weighing your options, we'd like to know what you think about the election.

Scan and upload your drawing of a candidate (either national or local) or a picture of your thoughts about what the election means to you. Include your first name, age, email address and the city and state where you live. Your drawing can be made with pencils, crayons, markers, chalk, or your favorite drawing materials.

We'll publish the drawings we receive on Poloppo's blog next week and the first 20 entrants will receive a free DYO t-shirt voucher (that means we'll print a piece of your artwork onto a cool t-shirt). Entries close at 5p.m. EST on Nov. 4.

Meanwhile, here are some election links for kids:

Time For Kids introduces the Democratic and Republican candidates and their ideas.

Barack Obama's Kids For Obama
page has video interviews with middle-schoolers and a printable campaign logo coloring sheet.

Check out the Scholastic News Kid Reporters live election-coverage webcast Nov. 7.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Catch a breeze ... it's kite season!


Maybe you're a kid at the beach with a simple one-line kite. Maybe you're a well-built grown-up maneuvering a giant squid kite in the breeze using so many strings you look like a marionette handler. Or maybe you just like to relax in a lawn chair and watch a wondrous Chinese dragon kite soaring on the breeze. Choose your fancy. Kites are for everyone. Whether you want to watch way-larger-than-life teddy-bear kites fly at a festival this summer, make and decorate your own kite, or just buy one and start flying, here are a few ideas to get you started.

Kites in the past
Kites are used mostly for recreation these days. When you're flying your kite, you're doing one of the same things people did for fun in ancient Japan and medieval Europe (and still do pretty much everywhere else around the world). But kites have also been used for serious business. During the Civil War, the Union Army dropped messages with kites asking the Confederate Army to surrender, and the Wright brothers flew big, sturdy man-lifting kites on the way to inventing the airplane.

Make your own kite
It's easy to make your own kite out of a few things you probably already have around the house. Here are some instructions for a small kite that flies beautifully in a moderate breeze. Young Poloppo artists have tried these and loved them. Or, if you're looking to recycle all those plastic bags cluttering up your kitchen drawers, you can turn them into a lightweight, easy-to-fly kite.

Decorate your own kite
Remember that kites are seen from afar, so bold colors and designs tend to work best. Try using 2-4 colors in big stripes or quadrants. Animating kites with eyes can be fun too. You could imagine a kite as any flying creature; a bird, dragon, pegasus or even some other fictitious flying creature of your own invention.

Go spy a kite
There are hundreds of kite festivals where you can purchase kites, learn to make them, and watch stunt kiters and kite ballet artists perform. Try googling your local kite festival and get ready to fly!

Go buy a kite
You can buy a kite at just about any toy store or department store. If you're thinking about buying a specialty kite, here are a few great kite stores and their web sites:

Into the Wind, Boulder, Colorado

Kitty Hawk Kites, Nags Head, North Carolina

Colors on the Wind, Spokane, Washington

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Wednesday, July 2, 2008

Follow the Sun



Sunprinting: an old technique for new ideas (and a great summer-time activity for kids!).


Did you know that one of the oldest types of photographic printing is also one of the easiest? Cyanotypes were first developed in 1842, and artists and kids are still finding ways to make these blue-colored prints look modern.

Cyanotypes are a type of sunprint. That means you don't need to be in a darkroom to make them. You just need paper that's coated with a light-sensitive chemical, a tray of water, some objects or photographic negatives to make your image with, and sunlight. (Cyanotype chemicals are relatively safe. You need to be careful to keep them away from your mouth and to wash your hands after using them, but they're suitable for young artists.)

The easiest way to make sunprints is to buy a sunprint kit. It contains small squares of pre-coated paper, and it's about $5. The kit is just the right size to carry along to the beach or on a hiking trip, and you can use it to make images of flowers, shells, or whatever else you find along the way. Here are some examples of pictures made with a sunprint kit.

To make your sunprint, just place some leaves, flowers, or other objects on the paper and place it in the sun for a few minutes. Then rinse it off in a tray of water. If you don't have a photo-chemical tray, a clean, plastic take-out container works great. Watch this short video to see how much fun it is to watch your picture appear.

You can also use photographic negatives to make your picture. (Your parents probably have lots of them! Use them make new prints of old family photos.) Just place them on the paper, then put a sheet of glass on top to hold them down. (If you use a kit, it comes with a small sheet of Plexiglass for this purpose.) Your picture will be the same size as your negatives. If you have some 35 mm negatives, you can print a whole strip of them on one piece of paper.

You can even make your own negatives. Print your favorite photos, drawings, text, or collages onto clear ink-jet transparencies that you can buy from an office supply store. Clear ink-jet mailing labels make nice little negatives too.

If you get hooked on sunprinting and you want to try some more advanced techniques, you can buy a cyanotype kit from your local photography supply store or order it online from Photographers Formulary for about $20. This kit includes two chemical solutions that you mix together and apply to paper using a brush or a glass rod. (If you're a teenager and you read the directions carefully, you can do this yourself. Younger kids will need an adult's help.) Coating your own paper will let you make prints as large as you want, and you use different kinds of papers. For a traditional look, try a nice watercolor paper, or for a more experimental look, try brown paper shopping bags, cardboard or fabric.

Look what other artists have done using cyanotypes!

Cyanotype images of dresses, glassware and sea animals by artist Dan Peyton

A cyanotype quilt by New York artist Sandra Sider

Artist Bily Renkl used cyanotypes along with other techniques to make mixed-media collages.

[ This post is by Kris Vagner ].

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Sunday, June 15, 2008

Elementary, My Dear


Anshul Samar is CEO of Alchemist Empire in Cupertino, California, and designer of Elementeo, a card game that brings chemistry to (surreal) life.

Samar has the eager, toothy smile of a 14-year-old. Oh, wait! He is a 14-year-old. Poloppo interviewed the fast-rising game-design star by e-mail about his creative process.

Poloppo: When did you first conceive of the Elementeo game?

Anshul Samar: I thought of Elementeo some time in elementary school. I always used to see kids interested in fantasy and fun and parents interested in learning and education. I wanted to combine those two worlds together in one action-packed, fun, educational game.

P: Have you thought of other games in the past?

AS: I haven't thought of many games in the past, but I've always been interested in forming companies. In second grade I wrote a story on how I will beat Microsoft, and in fourth I made a newspaper for my elementary school.

P: Do you draw? Have you ever drawn in the past?

AS: At one point I was oil painting and I took painting and cartooning classes in my summer break. In fact, in the very beginning prototypes, I had to hand-draw many card pictures. I then took a picture of them, uploaded them into my computer, edited them with free printing software, and then inserted them into the template.

P: Would you consider yourself to be evenly balanced between creative and scientific, left and right brain?

AS: I'm not really sure. First of all, science and creativity are those two types of things that are extremely similar but at the same time extremely different. I don't think you can compare them. In both creativity and science you have to think out of the box and solve problems. In both you have to create combat and conquer. And both of them you have to venture out and explore new possibilities. But then again, in some sense creativity is limitless, and science is related only to facts. Science comes from creativity and you think creatively in science. I don't think that really answers your question about how balanced I am... I really don't know. Maybe I am more creative.... I am always into thinking up of new ideas... it is what I love to do!

P: How highly do you value your creativity?

AS: First of all, without creativity the world would be a black-and-white photograph. There would be a pile of boredom in our lives, and color would be gone from every aspect. Creativity creates variety. Creativity causes new ideas, which create new technology and more things that can make our lives cooler and more enjoyable. Creativity is a gift that everyone has. If someone were to take creativity away from me that would be like taking the fish from the ocean and putting it in a small tank of water. Fun and excitement would disappear from my life. So yes, I value my creativity.

P: Do you consider creative development (especially the capacity to think "out of the box") to be an important part of your education?

AS: I think the more our schools can get me to think out of the box the better it is for me and for the whole world. The schools do a great job of creative development with projects and math. Out-of-the-box thinking allows people to find those hidden solutions in the corners of their minds to solve problems from disease to technology.

P: Do you have other games in mind for development once Elementeo takes off?

AS: There are many logical extensions of Elementeo, but I'll keep that as a surprise.  : )

Tuesday, May 6, 2008

Printables Are Here!


Are you the type of kid (or grown-up) who likes to practice your fine motor skills by coloring inside the lines? Or do you love to color outside the lines and scribble your dreams and fantasies down on a piece of paper?

Either way, today's a great day to pick up a crayon and express yourself. Today is World Kids Coloring Day. School groups from 13 countries are holding coloring events to raise funds for Save the Children's Rewrite the Future campaign, a program that helps children in war-torn regions secure a quality education.

We're celebrating World Kids Coloring Day with the official release of our brand new "printables" - coloring pages adapted from drawings by our young artists from around the world. These pages are a unique and fresh take on "coloring-in".

Sometimes, what begins as the simple and therapeutic process of "coloring-in" can become a highly creative process that moves beyond lines and into the realm of pure imagination.

The debate between "coloring-in" and "blank page" drawing is an age-old one. Many art educators believe the process of "coloring in" inhibits a child's creative development. I've been drawing with my 4-year-old daughter since she was around 18 months old. The experience has been at various times both deeply therapeutic, and bountifully creative - sometimes more one than the other, and other times both in equal doses.

My daughter and I often resolve things on paper. Firstly, the very act of drawing, with its repetitive yet free nature, has an immediate calming effect. It's a form of meditation in a way, that slows the heart rate and reduces stress.

If it's down-time we need, we'll often just "color in", as opposed to drawing or painting on a blank page. But the blank page is vital for a different kind of expression; we express our mood and feelings through the colors, shapes, characters and situations we create on the page. It might be something as happy as a flower, as dramatic as a thunderstorm, or as peaceful as a meadow ... or it could be something much more complex, like "My dancing flower fell over in the blue rain" (which, translated might mean "I fell out with my best friend today").

Here at Poloppo we believe in both the therapeutic and inspirational capacity of art for children, and we can see endless possibilities in stimulating children's creativity by providing a different kind of coloring page - one that captures the freshness and immediacy of child art and encourages endless imaginative possibilities.

Today, we'll donate 25% of all sales of our raglan T's and baby onesies to Save the Children. Shop Poloppo.

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Bubble-icious



It's Tuesday night and I'm sitting at JFK airport jostling for airwaves at JetBlue's free wireless hotspot, while I wait for the 8pm flight back to San Francisco. Robert and I have just had a whirlwind few days in New York City at the hip kids' trade show, Bubble. (Okay, I confess this post is a week overdue).

But Bubble-icious it was! Entirely sheltered from any mediocre swag, this was a tasty sample of the world's creme-de-la-creme of children's apparel, toys and household products. We were rapt to have been selected for participation and the show was a great success for us in terms of strong interest from both press and buyers (and yes, even orders). We were especially stoked by interest shown from the president of FAO Schwartz.

So who was there, and who rocked the show? In line with our objective at Poloppo to develop the website into a creative resource for parents and kids alike, here are some of our most favorite companies from the show. With toys, decor and clothes like these, your wee ones will be well on their way towards learning that creative fun happens well outside the box ...

Hip From Holland. These Dutch lasses located in Boston are cleverly importing into the US some of the hippest kids' products from The Netherlands including eco-friendly and quick-to-assemble cardboard playhouses and interlocking toys. www.hipfromholland.com

Hip From Holland

Our Children's Gorilla. "Children's imagination is our inspiration" say the Swedish team from this quirky and fun company creating children's paraphenalia. Never thought your kid needed monkey-shaped coat hangers or a ceramic alien piggy bank? Think again. The New York fire station and brownstone doll's houses made from recycled cardboard are especially cool. www.ourchildrensgorilla.com

Our Children's Gorilla

Lea's Alphabet. This charming chap from France seems to have spent much of his early fatherhood roaming the cities of Paris and New York photographing colorful signage letters (I'm sure he had his first-born daughter napping in the stroller or back-pack at the time). He then takes the letter images and places them next to pics of objects with the same first letter (you know, L for lollipop, A for Apple). www.gregoireganter.com

Lea's Alphabet

Romp. You can be sure to bring your kids' rooms to life with these vintage wallpaper shapes hand-cut into silhouettes of safari animals, birds and trees. Originally out of Brooklyn, you can find them at www.rompstore.com

Romp

i golfini della nonna. LA-based mom-and-daughter team draw on their Italian design roots with these darling soft toys which they have knitted up in Bolivia. www.golfini.com

i golfini della nonna

Deglingos.These crazy little French critters deserve their own country! So soft and tactile too. www.deglingos.com

Deglingos

Wall Candy Arts.What a fun way to decorate your kids' rooms! www.wallcandyarts.com

Wall Candy

Scout. Comfy, colorful and organic with cute artwork (some inspired by different world cultures) ... these ladies are Bay Area neighbors, based in Oakland! www.scoutbaby.com

Scout

Like A Bike. This bike looks like so much fun, you'll wish you were four years old all over again. www.likeabikeusa.com

Like A Bike

PS Big kudos to Florence and Vanessa for putting together such a beautiful show. Nous aimons Bubble!

PPS Robert is our all-round star industrial and graphic designer, housefrau (no printer is beyond his fixing), and sales magician (resist him if you can!).


Bubble